Citing the same source that informed iMore of the March 7th announcement date of Apple's latest tablet, it is believed that the upcoming iPad will launch with 4G LTE technology.

It's not the first time the claim has been made. But as the launch comes closer with only two days until chief executive Tim Cook takes the stage for his first major product announcement, historically this is the week where the tidbits of semi-accurate leaks hit the media.

The only thing we really know is what Apple is telling us. We know there is something set for two days time, and we expect it to be an iPad announcement.

The claim:

"The same source that originally told iMore Apple would be holding their iPad 3 event on March 7 has now let us know that the announcement will include 4G LTE networking."

Sounds like LTE is good to go, though it remains to be seen how Apple will handle the many different 4G bands being used internationally. The Wall Street Journal previously reported that AT&T and Verizon would be getting LTE-equipped iPads, but had no word on carriers outside the U.S."

Call me skeptical, but it could go either way. There are three things that spring to mind:

Battery technology is still not to the point where devices like the iPad or iPhone can be made their intended slim size, and not forfeit a battery that is wholly compatible with 4G LTE. The high-speed networking requires a larger battery for the same usage hours as a 3G phone. It's why you see so many phones with battery extender packs.

Apple doesn't do 'developing' in that it takes on technologies it knows consumers will use. 4G LTE is still growing and on a worldwide level is still slim. NFC --- and even 4G at the time, to some extent --- was thought to be the next great thing and yet it was left out of the iPhone 4S launch completely.

Verizon would benefit (and suffer) because Apple does play favourite, and not just in its media reporting of who gets what. Verizon would benefit massively from a 4G tablet as it is the only U.S. network to currently stock the iPad. But Verizon must have known for a great deal of time as part of its inevitable efforts to prepare its still-developing next-generation network that a 4G tablet was on its way.

Apple won't bring out an iPad just for 4G markets, nor can it afford to bring out 4G to markets that have years until 4G spectrum is divvied up rolled out --- years in which the company could be spending on developing better battery technologies.

The case of precedence will also ring some bells. Does an iPad with 4G technology mean that the next iteration of the iPhone will too? Will the iPhone 5 be thicker? Or will it have a removable back for a battery extender?

Throwing out one question throws back no answers, yet even more questions. At this stage, it would be pointless to speculate.

Only two days to wait, and all shall be revealed. ZDNet and sister-site CNET will be reporting as the announcement happens.